XenServer log files.
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I've been setting up a central logging server for this weeks project. It's a week long project I just completed, yay for things not breaking this week.
Anyway, I was looking at an ssh session to the one XenServer host we have, going, "Where'd rsyslog go?" Turns out I was making life harder than it needed to be. Just use the GUI. Much as I dislike relying on a GUI, it's just easy.
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@travisdh1 said in XenServer log files.:
I've been setting up a central logging server for this weeks project. It's a week long project I just completed, yay for things not breaking this week.
Anyway, I was looking at an ssh session to the one XenServer host we have, going, "Where'd rsyslog go?" Turns out I was making life harder than it needed to be. Just use the GUI. Much as I dislike relying on a GUI, it's just easy.
What are you trying to do?
Some of that stuff doesn't work, and it's all been changed in XS7 anyway.
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@BRRABill said in XenServer log files.:
@travisdh1 said in XenServer log files.:
I've been setting up a central logging server for this weeks project. It's a week long project I just completed, yay for things not breaking this week.
Anyway, I was looking at an ssh session to the one XenServer host we have, going, "Where'd rsyslog go?" Turns out I was making life harder than it needed to be. Just use the GUI. Much as I dislike relying on a GUI, it's just easy.
What are you trying to do?
Some of that stuff doesn't work, and it's all been changed in XS7 anyway.
Just forward the logging messages to a single place. When something stops working I have one spot to go looking for the problems, and can easily find it by searching for a hostname from the /var/log/messages file on my rsyslog host server.
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@travisdh1 said in XenServer log files.:
@BRRABill said in XenServer log files.:
@travisdh1 said in XenServer log files.:
I've been setting up a central logging server for this weeks project. It's a week long project I just completed, yay for things not breaking this week.
Anyway, I was looking at an ssh session to the one XenServer host we have, going, "Where'd rsyslog go?" Turns out I was making life harder than it needed to be. Just use the GUI. Much as I dislike relying on a GUI, it's just easy.
What are you trying to do?
Some of that stuff doesn't work, and it's all been changed in XS7 anyway.
Just forward the logging messages to a single place. When something stops working I have one spot to go looking for the problems, and can easily find it by searching for a hostname from the /var/log/messages file on my rsyslog host server.
Oh, that will definitely work, then.
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Good information for me as I'm in the process of learning XenServer (although its 7)